A high-cell-density fed-batch fermentation for the production of heterologous proteins in Escherichia coli was developed using the positively regulated Escherichia coli rhaBAD promoter. The expression system was improved by reducing of the amount of expensive L-rhamnose necessary for induction of the rhamnose promoter and by increasing the vector stability. Consumption of the inducer L-rhamnose was inhibited by inactivation of L-rhamnulose kinase encoding gene rhaB of Escherichia coli W3110, responsible for the first irreversible step in rhamnose catabolism. Plasmid instability caused by multimerization of the expression vector in the recombination-proficient W3110 was prevented by insertion of the multimer resolution site cer from the ColE1 plasmid into the vector. Fermentation experiments with the optimized system resulted in the production of 100 g x L(-1) cell dry weight and 3.8 g x L(-1) of recombinant L-N-carbamoylase, an enzyme, which is needed for the production of enantiomeric pure amino acids in a two-step reaction from hydantoins.
Hydantoinases are valuable enzymes for the production of optically pure D- and L-amino acids. They catalyse the reversible hydrolytic ring cleavage of hydantoin or 5'-monosubstituted hydantoins and are therefore classified in the EC nomenclature as cyclic amidases (EC 3.5.2.). In the EC nomenclature, four different hydantoin-cleaving enzymes are described: dihydropyrimidinase (3.5.2.2), allantoinase (EC 3.5.2.5), carboxymethylhydantoinase (EC 3.5.2.4), and N-methylhydantoinase (EC 3.5.2.14). Beside these, other hydantoinases with known metabolic functions, such as imidase and carboxyethylhydantoinase and enzymes with unknown metabolic function, are described in the literature and have not yet been classified. An important question is whether the distinct hydantoinases, which are frequently classified as L-, D-, and non-selective hydantoinases depending on their substrate specificity and stereoselectivity, are related to each other. In order to investigate the evolutionary relationship, amino acid sequence data can be used for a phylogenetic analysis. Although most of these enzymes only share limited sequence homology (identity < 15%) and therefore are only distantly related, it can be shown (i) that most of them are members of a broad set of amidases with similarities to ureases and build a protein superfamily, whereas ATP-dependent hydantoinases are not related, (ii) that the urease-related amidases have evolved divergently from a common ancestor and (iii) that they share a metal-binding motif consisting of conserved histidine residues. The difference in enantioselectivity used for the classification of hydantoinases on the basis of their biotechnological value does not reflect their evolutionary relationship, which is to a more diverse group of enzymes than was assumed earlier. This protein superfamily probably has its origin in the prebiotic conditions of the primitive earth.
Molecular imprinting was applied to the synthesis of methacrylic acid-ethylene glycol dimethacrylate copolymers specific for the herbicide atrazine. In toluene, these imprints bound atrazine with dissociation constant (K D ) values as low as 10 -6 M, and could be used for the development of a ligand binding assay for the detection of atrazine. The selectivity profile of the imprints for triazines structurally related to atrazine was comparable to those of antibodies. The substituent of carbon C1 is the most important feature determining the level of cross-reactivity, and the binding affinity decreased in the order Cl > OCH 3 > OH > SCH 3 (atrazine, the imprint species, has Cl at this position). No cross-reaction of structurally unrelated herbicides and other compounds was detected. Rebinding experiments in phosphate buffer containing 0.15% Tween 20 gave similar results. The polymers could be packed into HPLC columns and used for the separation of triazine derivatives. The potential uses of imprinted polymers for the detection of pollutants in environmental analysis and as sorbents for the specific removal of toxic compounds in waste water treatment are discussed.
This study provides a mathematical model of T7 RNA polymerase (T7 RNAP) kinetics under in vitro conditions targeted at application of this model to simulation of dynamic transcription performance. A functional dependence of transcript synthesis rate is derived based on: (a) essential reactant concentrations, including T7 RNAP and its promoter, substrate nucleotides, and the inhibitory byproduct inorganic pyrophosphate; (b) a distinction among vector characteristics such as recognition sequences regulating transcription initiation and termination, respectively; and (c) specific properties of the nucleotide sequence including both transcript length and nucleotide composition. Inactivation kinetics showed a half‐life of T7 RNAP activity of 50 min under the conditions applied in vitro using the isolated enzyme. Model parameters and their precision are estimated using dynamic simulation and nonlinear regression analysis. The particular novelty of this model is its capability to incorporate linear genomic sequence information for simulation of nonlinear in vitro transcription kinetics. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Biotechnol Bioeng 72: 548–561, 2001.
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